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Keisai Eisen - Sanpoukazari to otafuku no men

Sanpoukazari to otafuku no men (1820)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
The Artist died in 1848 so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries where the copyright term is the Artist's life plus 70 years or fewer.

Keisai Eisen was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist who specialised in bijin-ga (pictures of beautiful women). His best works, including his ōkubi-e ("large head pictures"), are considered to be masterpieces of the "decadent" Bunsei Era (1818–1830). He was also known as Ikeda Eisen, and wrote under the name of Ippitsuan.

Eisen was born in Edo into the Ikeda family, the son of a noted calligrapher. He was apprenticed to Kanō Hakkeisai, from whom he took the name Keisai, and after the death of his father he studied under Kikugawa Eizan. His initial works reflected the influence of his mentor, but he soon developed his own style.

He produced a number of surimono (prints that were privately issued), erotic prints, and landscapes, including The Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō, which he started and which was completed by Hiroshige. However, his most famous works are the bijin-ga (pictures of beautiful women) which portrayed the subjects as more worldly than those depicted by earlier artists, replacing their grace and elegance with a less studied sensuality. He produced many portraits and full-length studies depicting the fashions of the time.

In addition to producing a prolific number of prints, he was a writer, producing biographies of the Forty-seven Ronin and several books, including a continuation of the Ukiyo-e Ruiko (History of Prints of the Floating World), a book which documented the lives of the ukiyo-e artists. His supplement is known as "Notes of a Nameless Old Man." He describes himself as a dissolute hard-drinker and claims to have been the owner of a brothel in Nezu in the 1830s which had burned down.

More Artworks by Keisai Eisen (View all 36 Artworks)

Ryōgokubashi no sekisho

Ryōgokubashi no sekisho (1844)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Woman in Checked Kimono

Woman in Checked Kimono (19th century)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Kayoikomachi no mitate

Kayoikomachi no mitate (1818)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
A Distant View of Snow on the Sumida River in Edo

A Distant View of Snow on the Sumida River in Edo (early 1830s)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Courtesan

Courtesan (early to mid-1800s)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Kankan odori no uta

Kankan odori no uta (1825)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Hanashobu ni nadeshiko

Hanashobu ni nadeshiko (1818)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Pictures of Eastern Brocade (from the series Famous Products of Edo)

Pictures of Eastern Brocade (from the series Famous Products of Edo) (c. early 1820s)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Fumi o motsu onna

Fumi o motsu onna (1825)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
The Courtesan Hanamurasaki of the Tsuchiya (from the series Beauties in their Finery amid Mallow Flowers)

The Courtesan Hanamurasaki of the Tsuchiya (from the series Beauties in their Finery amid Mallow Flowers) (early or mid 1830s)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Chōchi o motsu onna

Chōchi o motsu onna (1818)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Hakone shuku

Hakone shuku (1835)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Neko o idaku musume

Neko o idaku musume (1843)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
Carp Ascending a Waterfall

Carp Ascending a Waterfall (early or mid-1830s)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
One of a Series of Women Representing the Seasons

One of a Series of Women Representing the Seasons (19th century)

Keisai Eisen (Japanese, 1790-1848)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
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